Thursday, June 24, 2010

Cuban Catholic Church hopes pope can visit in 2012

Posted on Thursday, 06.17.10
Cuban Catholic Church hopes pope can visit in 2012
By WILL WEISSERT
Associated Press Writer

HAVANA -- Cuba's Roman Catholic leadership hopes Pope Benedict XVI can
visit in 2012, a bishop said Thursday, in what would be the first papal
trip to Cuba since John Paul II came in 1998.

Monsignor Emilio Aranguren, bishop of the eastern province of Holguin,
said "it's our hope, our interest, that the pope come to Cuba in the
year 2012," the 400th anniversary of the discovery of Cuba's patron saint.

"It's up to the Holy See," he said. The Vatican had no immediate comment.

In 1612, three men from the eastern copper mining town of El Cobre found
a diminutive wooden statue floating off the coast bearing the label, "I
am the Virgin of Charity." She was declared patron saint in 1916.

Aranguren's comments came at a briefing on the activities of Archbishop
Dominique Mamberti, the Vatican's foreign minister, who is in Havana to
mark Catholic Social Week. He said Mamberti's visit has nothing to do
with a possible papal visit.

The Catholic Church has recently become a major political voice on the
island. In May, Cuban Cardinal Jaime Ortega negotiated an end to a ban
on marches by a small group of wives and mothers of political prisoners
known as the Ladies in White.

The cardinal and another church leader subsequently met with President
Raul Castro for four hours. Church officials then announced the
government would transfer political prisoners held far from their
families and give better access to medical care for inmates who need it.
It also freed prisoner Ariel Sigler for health reasons.

Members of Cuba's small opposition community hope the Mamberti visit
could lead to freedom for more political prisoners or a new round of
transfers. Aranguren said Thursday that Mamberti likely will meet with
Castro before he leaves Sunday, but has no plans to meet with dissidents.

In 1998, John Paul II made the first papal trip to Cuba. The Vatican's
No. 2, Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, visited the island a decade later.

Cuba never broke ties with the Vatican, even when the island was
officially atheist after the 1959 revolution that brought Fidel Castro
to power. The government removed references to atheism in the 1991
constitution and allowed religious believers to join the Communist Party.

http://www.miamiherald.com/2010/06/17/1686455/cuban-catholic-church-hopes-pope.html

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